Since their last release in 2004, the Blue Hearts have matured as a band and individually as musicians. This CD has all original material written by Ryan Hartt & his cohort Eric Ducoff and has a good time gut bucket sound with excellent harp playing and tasteful traditional guitar work from Eric Ducoff. Hartt's vocals are strong and natural and the band sounds like they have played the songs for a while which adds a listenability to the entire proceedings.

Hearts in Atlantis tells the story of Robert "Bobby" Garfield (David Morse), a middle-aged man recollecting his past, in particular the summer when he was eleven years old (Anton Yelchin). During that summer, he and his two friends, Carol Gerber (Mika Boorem) and John "Sully" Sullivan (Will Rothhaar), experienced many things together, the most mysterious of which was meeting an elderly drifter named Ted Brautigan (Anthony Hopkins)…

Hearts That Strain was recorded in Nashville and features the breezy single 'How Soon The Dawn', a collaboration with Dan Auerbach. Working with Grammy Award winning producer David Ferguson and Matt Sweeney, Jake recorded the album in Nashville with some of the best players in the history of popular music. As part of American Sound Studio's legendary house band The Memphis Boys, Gene Chrisman and Bobby Woods provided the chops on such pivotal records as Dusty In Memphis, In The Ghetto, Suspicious Minds and Dark End Of The Street, cutting their teeth in sessions with Wilson Pickett, Aretha Franklin and Dionne Warwick. "They're old guys but they're amazing," Jake says.

Jake Bugg is back with his stunning 4th album ‘Hearts That Strain’. Recorded in Nashville with members of ‘The Memphis Boys’ who played on classics such as Dusty in Memphis, In The Ghetto and Suspicious Minds, Jake also collaborated with Dan Auerbach from The Black Keys to create a classic and timeless record.

Janis Joplin is one of the most revered and iconic of all rock & roll singers, a tragic and misunderstood figure who thrilled millions of listeners and blazed new creative trails before her death in 1970 at age 27…

Gram Parsons' legend is so great that it's easy for the neophyte to be skeptical about his music, wondering if it really is deserving of such effusive praise. Simply put, it is, and if you question the veracity of that statement, turn to Rhino's peerless double-disc set, Sacred Hearts and Fallen Angels: The Gram Parsons Anthology. This is the first truly comprehensive overview of Parsons' work, running from the International Submarine Band, through the Byrds, to the Flying Burrito Brothers and his two solo albums, scattering appropriate rarities or non-LP tracks along the way.

“Revelator” means “one that reveals” and that’s certainly true in the case of the debut album from this band of misfit toys. Formed in Long Beach, California in early 2014, Veronica Grim & The Heavy Hearts knew early on the stories they were telling weren't for everyone: their’s is a tapestry of truths that burn like whiskey and haunt like ghosts - but for every painful memory on the album, there is also raucous celebration of love, brotherhood, romance and mischief. At the end of the day, knowing the party has to end someday makes each kiss deeper, each shot more intoxicating and each chord ring with more truth.